New Jersey Must Continue its Legacy of Support for Open Space

Transcription

New Jersey Must Continue its Legacy of Support for Open Space
August/Sept 2013
Volume 20
Number 5
No Pipeline in the
Pinelands................. 2
Gov. Christie Should
Sign the Healthy
Forests Act....... ....3
Got Water?............4
Open Space Essential
for Education...... 6
PPA Events........... 7
Pinelands
Commission
Policy & Implementation
Meeting
Wednesday, August 28
9:30 am
Tell the Pinelands
Commission to deny a
request to put a natural
gas pipeline through the
Forest Management Area.
See page 2 for more infor-
mation.
17 PEMBERTON ROAD
SOUTHAMPTON, NJ 08088
T - 609.859.8860
F - 609.859.8804
WWW.PINELANDSALLIANCE.ORG
The wild and beautiful Oswego River
Ne w Jers e y Must C ontinu e its L egac y of
Supp or t for Op en Sp ace
by Jaclyn Rhoads, Ph.D., Assistant Executive Director
New Jersey has a strong record of support
for open space protection. As the most
densely populated state in the nation, we
know that undeveloped land is at a premium
and once lost it is gone forever. Since 1961
New Jersey voters have passed 13 out of 13
ballot measures supportive of funding for
open space, farmland and historic
preservation.
The last ballot measure was passed in 2009
and now all of the preservation dollars from
that bond act have been fully allocated (or
committed) to green acres, farmland
preservation and historic preservation
projects.
The Legislature introduced a measure to
provide a sustainable source of funding for
these programs under SCR160/ACR205.
This critical legislation proposes a
constitutional amendment – to be approved
by voter referendum – to dedicate $200
million annually of sales tax revenue for
preservation and stewardship of open
space, farmland, waterways and historic
sites.
The Pinelands Preservation Alliance is a
member of New Jersey Keep it Green, a
coalition of 180 member organizations
working together to seek passage of this
critical legislation. NJ Keep it Green has led
successful campaigns to pass ballot
measures in 2006, 2007, and 2009 resulting
in $600 million for open space, farmland
and historical preservation.
continued on page 5
Inside The
Pinelands
Published six times a
year by the Pinelands
Preservation Alliance
Executive Editor
Carleton Montgomery
Editor
Becky Free
PPA Staff
Richard Bizub
Tom Dunn
Amy Karpati
Theresa Lettman
Jaclyn Rhoads
Stephen Sebastian
Jane Wiltshire
Distributed to
PPA members & volunteers,
state legislators,
Pinelands municipalities,
elected officials,
selected officials,
and planning boards
Mailing services generously
donated by Swift Mailing
Services of Bensalem, PA
(www.swiftmailing.com)
Our newsletter is available
at:
www.pinelandsalliance.org
Printed on 100% recycled paper
(made from post-consumer pulp
produced in a chlorine-free pulping and bleaching process)
Circulation: 5500
2
No Pipeline in the Pinelands
by Carleton Montgomery, Executive Director
South Jersey Gas is proposing to put a 22mile natural gas pipeline through the
Pinelands Forest Management Area in order
to enable the B.L. England Plant at Beesley’s
Point, right on the Great Egg Harbor River,
to be retrofitted and greatly expanded. This
is a bad place for a power plant in the first
place – and it’s a bad place to give new life to
a power plant that has barely operated for
years.
The proposed pipeline violates the Pinelands
Comprehensive Management Plan (CMP),
which only permits such infrastructure in
the Forest Management Area if it is
"intended to primarily serve the needs of the
Pinelands." N.J.A.C. 7:50-5.23. To the extent
it operates at all, the B.L. England plant
primarily serves demand outside the
Pinelands, where the great majority of
residences and businesses in Atlantic and
Cape May County are located. There is no
exception for pipes run along or under
roads.
This rule was put in the CMP for good
reason. This kind of infrastructure can bring
a variety of environmental harms and pressure
for more development along its route. The
Pinelands Commission is charged to defend
the Pinelands CMP, yet it is in discussions
with the Board of Public Utilities (BPU) and
South Jersey Gas to waive its restrictions for
this project. That would be a bad mistake for
several reasons.
First, if the Pinelands Commission doesn’t
stand by own its rules, no one else will.
Certainly not BPU or South Jersey Gas.
When the Commission gives special
exceptions for powerful players, it
undermines the whole Pinelands protection
project and raises the question why anyone
should respect its decisions.
Second, approving one pipeline project will
invite more. The Pinelands was created in
part as a response to plans to construct offshore drilling platforms and run transportation
pipes across the Pinelands to refineries on
the Delaware River. Off-shore drilling did
not happen forty years ago, but it may happen
in the future. Similarly, proposals for
Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) terminals
along the shore continue to be pressed,
raising the possibility that pipes would be
proposed across the Pinelands to transport
LNG.
Third, there is no good public-interest reason
to make an exception in this case. The
proponents seek “green cover” by arguing
that natural gas is cleaner than the coal and
oil that have fired the plant in the past. The
argument is seductive, but wrong. This plant
has only operated for peak demand for years.
Thus, the plant is not needed to
operate on a full-time basis at all. If changed
to natural gas and full operation, it will cause
more air pollution than it does now – to say
nothing of the environmental and health
risks inherent in the production and
transport of the gas to this isolated plant.
Finally, there are alternatives to the
proposed pipeline route. There are power
plants directly to the north in Atlantic
County, so it should be possible to run a
supply line outside the Pinelands Area where
it will not impinge on the interior forests of
the Pinelands.
Attend the Pinelands Commission Policy and
Implementation meeting Wednesday, August 28,
at 9:30 a.m. and tell them they must respecttheir
own rules and deny this request.
For more information call the Pinelands
Commission at 609-894-7300. The agenda
will be available online at:
www.state.nj.us/pinelands/about/mtng
NJ Pinelands Commission
15C Springfield Road
New Lisbon, NJ 08064
You can also call PPA at 609-859-8860. To
stay involved with this and other action
opportunities join the Pinelands Watch by
emailing [email protected].
Governor Christie Should Sign the Healthy Forests Act
by Jaclyn Rhoads, Ph.D., Assistant Executive Director
In 2012, the Forest Harvest Program
on State Lands bill (S1085) was introduced with the primary purpose to
stimulate a timber market by harvesting large trees from our state forests in
the name of stewardship, but the bill
failed to look at the array of needs to
steward the open spaces that we enjoy
and seek to protect. The bill required
no subsequent management of the
inevitable invasive species encroachment and intense deer herbivory
known to prevent regeneration of
native forest plants. Additionally, the
bill failed to direct the Department of
Environmental Protection (DEP) to
create a holistic stewardship plan for
state lands.
PPA, along with forty scientists and
other conservation groups opposed
this bill. Since that time PPA, the New
Jersey Conservation Foundation
(NJCF), NJ Audubon Society, the NJ
Highlands Coalition and others
worked to dramatically transform the
bill from a Forest Harvest Program to
the New Jersey Healthy Forests Act
(S1085). It is a testimony to how the
environmental and scientific community can engage and transform the
legislative process.
There are two key changes to the proposed legislation. First, it includes a
provision that all forests have a forest
stewardship plan, and second, it
requires that all forestry on state land
would be independently certified by a
third party auditor to conform to the
Forest Stewardship Council (FSC)
standards and practices, both in planning and implementation. The FSC
standards were carefully examined by
PPA, NJCF, The Nature Conservancy
and other forest restoration experts.
The Nature Conservancy is one of the
leading international conservation
groups serving on the FSC Board.
The bill’s prime sponsor, Senator Bob
Smith, indicated that including FSC
certification was the “only way to lend
credibility” to the concept of using
our public lands for wood product
extraction while also practicing habitat stewardship.
FSC is a global, not-for-profit organization dedicated to the promotion of
responsible forest management
worldwide. World Wildlife Fund and
Greenpeace are just two of many
national environmental groups that
are members of the FSC. According
to the FSC website, forest management plans are certified after going
through an assessment process which
includes an in-depth review of the
forest management systems. The FSC
certification body sends a team of
experts to assess economic, social,
and environmental conditions in the
forest being evaluated. Assuming all
is in order, a Forest Management certificate is issued and valid for five
years, subject to annual checks.
S1085/A2837 also requires the forest
stewardship plans to conform to the
Pinelands Comprehensive Management plan which includes specific
forestry provisions. The bill recognizes the need to protect native
species, waterways, ecological integrity, and recreational uses on state lands.
Forestry is currently happening on
state lands without third party certification by FSC. PPA supports the forest stewardship bill because it requires
DEP to detail a visible, public plan for
state lands to protect natural
resources, restore natural disturbances
and accommodate recreational uses,
which is currently not required by the
DEP. Forest stewardship plans are
important because they provide an
opportunity to identify and reduce
invasive species, protect and enhance
rare plant populations, increase prescribed ecological fire, and address
many more needs that can increase the
ecological function of our state lands.
PPA thanks Senator Bob Smith for
taking the time to work with the environmental and scientific community
on creating a bill that meets the needs
of the forest.
The New Jersey State Legislature
passed this bill and it is now awaiting
Governor Christie’s signature. He has
until August 8th to sign the bill.
Check our website to find out where
this bill stands. Editor’s note: This
newsletter went to print prior to
August 8, 2013.
Pinelands Commission
Meetings
Wed., August 28, 9:30 am
Attend this Policy & Implementation
Meeting and speak out against the
South Jersey Gas Pipeline proposal.
Fri., Sept. 13, 9:30 am
This regular monthly meeting is open
to the public and they need to hear
from you.
NJ Pinelands Commission
15 Springfield Rd.
New Lisbon, NJ 08064
Phone: (609) 894-7300
3
G ot Water? Than k the Pinelands and the Hig h lands
by PPA Staff
The New Jersey Pinelands is not only
a globally unique habitat with rare
species and lots of opportunities for
outdoor
recreation;
this
ecosystem also provides a great service in storing and cleansing our water
supply.
Approximately one million yearround residents and millions more
visitors, along with the highly valued
economies of the Jersey Shore and
Atlantic City, rely on the water
resources of the New Jersey
Pinelands. In fact, the need to
protect the immense water resources
of the Kirkwood-Cohansey aquifer –
the name given to the 17 trillion gallon aquifer located within the
Pinelands soils – was among the primary motivations for the creation of
the 1979 Pinelands Protection Act.
The
New
Jersey
Highlands
encompasses 88 municipalities and
includes portions of seven counties in
the northwest part of the state –
Bergen, Hunterdon, Morris, Passaic,
Somerset, Sussex, and Warren. The
Highlands provides more than half of
New Jersey's population, 5.4
million people, with clean drinking
water through its wetlands, wells,
streams and reservoirs. A large sector
of the State's industrial base also relies
on abundant clean water from the
Highlands. In 2008 the Highlands
Water Protection and Planning Act
was passed to regulate growth in the
region
in
order
to
protect this water supply, much like
the Pinelands Protection Act.
These two special regions – the
Highlands and the Pinelands of New
Jersey – each have unique laws and
regional growth management plans
that aim to protect forests and water
supplies from being destroyed by
sprawling, uncontrolled development.
These
plans
bar
or
limit
development of hundreds of
thousands of acres of forests, while
4
channeling growth into existing
towns and designated growth areas.
At least 6.4 million New Jersey
residents rely on water from the
Highlands and Pinelands regions for
their drinking water. Despite this
fact, the water resources of the
Pinelands and Highlands often go
unmentioned, which is why Pinelands
Preservation Alliance and the New
Jersey Highlands Coalition began
working together on a joint campaign
to raise awareness about the importance of forest cover to water quality.
We created a joint website
www.saveH2Onj.org where you can
find more information about both
regions and what you can do to help.
We also kicked off a public
education effort with the creation of a
billboard outside to the New Jersey
Department of Environmental
Protection Offices in Trenton with the
headline Got Water? Thank the
Pinelands and the Highlands featuring
public officials who have been important to the protection of this essential
natural resource.
We also just put the billboard up on
Route 72 in Barnegat Township
facing east featuring former Governor
Brendan T. Byrne. Governor Byrne
signed the Pinelands Protection Act
in 1979 and considers the passage of
the act his proudest accomplishment
in public life. We are honored that he
agreed to participate.
Watersheds that are largely forested
are much more likely to provide good
water quality than watersheds with
greater
proportions
of
developed lands.
A forested
watershed filters water, reduces flood
and erosion risks, maintains stream
flow, and protects ground-water
recharge. The conversion of forest
land to other land uses leads to
reduced water quality through
increased runoff, soil erosion, lack of
natural filtration, downstream flooding, and the transport of
pollutants into waterways.
Clean water sourced from a forested
watershed is immensely difficult and
costly to substitute, yet its full economic value is rarely considered. As a
watershed’s forests are destroyed and
replaced by more intensive land use,
that water is more likely to require
treatment technologies to make it
drinkable.
Such technologies are expensive and
can themselves result in negative
environmental impacts such as
carbon emissions and chemical waste.
A study conducted by the Trust for
Public Land and the American Water
Works Association found that for
every 10% increase in forest cover in a
source area, water treatment costs
decrease by about 20%, leveling off
when forest cover is between 70100%.
Water resource protection is one of
the primary missions of the Pinelands
Preservation Alliance. It is absolutely
critical that Pinelands protections
remain in place and that forests
remain intact to secure our sustainable supply of good quality water well
into the future. As New Jersey leads
the race in becoming the first state in
the nation to reach build-out, it is
more critical than ever that citizens
place top priority on the preservation
of remaining open space to ensure
our clean and cost-effective water
supply. A clean water supply is, undeniably, the very foundation of our
livelihood.
Learn more about the water
resources of the Pinelands and
the Highlands at:
www.saveH2Onj.org
New Jersey Must Continue its Legacy of Support for Open Space
continued from cover
SCR160/ACR205 is a fiscally
responsible approach that won’t
increase taxes or state debt. The
dedication would not begin until fiscal
year 2015, so there would be no
impact on next year’s budget. $200
million represents less than one
percent of the state budget, and is the
average annual amount the state has
been investing in preservation
programs since 1998. The funds
would come from the projected
growth of more than $400 million
annually in sales taxes revenues
leaving hundreds of millions of dollars
available to fund other programs
above and beyond today’s levels.
What happened? In June 2013 the
Senate passed legislation similar to
SCR160 that would provide a
sustainable source of funding for open
space protection with overwhelming
bipartisan support (by a vote of 36 to
2). The Assembly did not act, forcing
the Senate to bring it up for a second
vote on July 29th. The Senate passed
it again by a vote of 22-8, two votes
shy of the super majority needed for
referral to the ballot in November
2013. There will be another opportunity to get this legislation on the
November 2014 ballot if the Assembly
takes action this year, and then both
chambers pass it again in 2014.
The importance of open space
preservation cannot be understated.
Every dollar invested in state land
preservation efforts returns $10 in
economic value through nature’s
goods and services like flood control
and water filtration. Agriculture is
the state’s third largest industry with
the more than 10,000 farms
generating at least a billion dollars
annually.
Experts say that an
additional 350,000 acres of farmland
needs to be preserved in order to
maintain a viable agricultural
industry so New Jersey can still be the
Garden State.
In the Pinelands, 568,000 acres have
been preserved in the Pinelands
National Reserve, but there is more
land in need of protection. For
example, in 2008 the state Pinelands
Commission completed an assessment that evaluated the current
ecological status of the entire
Pinelands Protection Area and found
that there are 64,947 acres in need of
greater protection.
Voter surveys indicate overwhelming
bipartisan support for a dedicated
sales tax to fund open space
protection.
NJ Keep It Green
commissioned a survey of 600
registered likely voters. The survey
found that 69% of voters support
dedicating $200 million annually
from state sales tax revenues to fund
open space, farmland and historic
preservation programs.
Fifteen counties - Camden, Cape May,
Cumberland, Essex, Gloucester,
Hudson,
Hunterdon,
Mercer,
Middlesex, Monmouth, Passaic,
Salem, Somerset, Union and Warren –
have all passed resolutions this year
supporting sustainable open space
funding as have the NJ Highlands
Council and the New Jersey State
League of Municipalities.
It is clear that there is significant
support in New Jersey for continuing
its legacy of open space protection.
The New Jersey Legislature must let
the voters decide how to protect our
land and historic resources. Waiting
can destroy decades of work and can
mean the loss of hundreds of acres of
land to development. This fiscally
responsible measure can secure the
future of New Jersey as it gets closer
and closer to build-out. We would
like to thank everyone who made calls
to their legislators – our work is not
done here so stay tuned!
For more information
www.njkeepitgreen.org.
visit,
State of the Pinelands
Report 2013
will be mailed to PPA members in
place of your next newsletter.
FAIRS & FESTIVALS
SEPTEMBER 15
HAMMONTON GREEN DAY FESTIVAL
Hammonton, NJ
OCTOBER 6
CATTUS ISLAND NATURE FESTIVAL
Toms River, NJ
OCTOBER 12
PINE BARRENS JAMBOREE
Waretown, NJ
OCTOBER 19 & 20
CHATSWORTH CRANBERRY FESTIVAL
Chatsworth, NJ
OCTOBER 19 & 20
BATSTO COUNTRY LIVING FAIR
Batsto Village in Wharton State Forest
Stop by PPA’s table!
5
Open Space is Essential for Environmental Education
by Amy Karpati, Ph.D., Director for Conservation Science
The Pinelands Preservation Alliance
of Ron and PPA staff made the
and the Bonazzi Foundation for the
Institute a fun experience throughout
Promotion of Science Education were
the week.”
pleased to present the 7th Annual Life
Open space plays a primary role in
Science Field Training Institute the
the programs organized by PPA and
last week of June. The goal of this
other environmental organizations
multi-day field science experience
that
incorporate
educational
was to strengthen current and future
components into their advocacy
educators’ field-based investigations
work. Serving as a living outdoor
in their teaching to ultimately
classroom, open space with its
improve student performance in
woodlands, wetlands, streams, and
science and math. The Institute was
meadows
provides
education
attended by 15 educators,
mostly high school and
Teachers used a seine net to collect
middle
school
science and identify macroinvertebrates.
teachers from seven counties.
Ron Smith, biology and environmental science teacher at
Haddonfield High School,
has been the facilitator of the
Institute since its inception.
Throughout the week, Ron
guided the participants
through outdoor field studies
and topic areas including
natural resource management, community ecology,
biodiversity, biostatistics, and
citizen science. “Instead of
textbook descriptions and mock data
sets, we collect real environmental
data using the methods and practices
of field science,” explained Ron.
Participants spent much time outdoors conducting vegetation analyses,
sampling
invertebrates
across
different habitat types, learning
species identification, canoeing a Pine
Barrens river, exploring fish
communities, and more.
“The way the concepts and activities
were presented made it easy to think
of ways to use the hands-on field
study methods in my biology classes,”
said high school biology teacher
Caroline Krisciunas. Fellow teacher
Nicole Lum added, “The enthusiasm
6
opportunities not available within the
walls of a school building. During the
Institute, teachers explored local
ecosystems such as the Batsto River
and Brendan T. Byrne State Forest.
“Access to the Pine Barrens and other
open space locations throughout the
region allows us to investigate nature
in a way that reveals species and
ecological processes. These are the
very reasons we study the
environment to begin with,” said Ron.
If we are to instill in future
generations a love for the natural
world and a conservation ethic, it is
essential to preserve open space and
bring our school children to these
natural areas. This is especially
important in New Jersey – the most
densely populated state in the nation
and the front-runner in the race to
reach complete build-out – where
many young students know only
pavement, buildings, and carefully
managed landscapes instead of
forests, streams, and soils.
“One of the most important aspects of
the Life Science Training Institute is
the combination of science and math
– especially statistical analysis,” said
Bob Bonazzi, creator of the
Bonazzi Foundation for the
Promotion
of
Science
Education.
“This allows
teachers the opportunity to
provide young students with a
sense of how critical it is to
interpret what they are seeing
statistically or risk inferring the
wrong conclusions. It provides
a basis not only for interpreting the science but also for
interpreting the validity of
what is read in the newspapers,
seen on TV or on the internet.
Since science is a driving force
in our society, understanding
how scientists come to conclusions
about our world is critical to their
education in science and beyond.”
The Pinelands Preservation Alliance
holds the Life Science Field Training
Institute annually thanks to the
generous funding provided by the
Bonazzi Foundation for the
Promotion of Science Education. For
more about the Foundation visit
www.bonazzifoundation.org.
If you would like information about
next summer’s Institute, please email
Amy at [email protected].
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
Hon. Brendan Byrne
Honorary Chair
Former Governor,
State of New Jersey
Richard J. Sullivan
Trustee Emeritus
David F. Moore
Chair
Leon M. Rosenson, Ph.D.
Vice Chair
Retired, Liposome Company
Robert Tucker, Ph.D.
Treasurer
Retired Scientist
Anne E. Heasly
Secretary
Conservation Consultant
James Barnshaw
Retired Physician
Timothy J. Byrne
Attorney
Charles M. Chapin
New Jersey Audubon Society
Emile DeVito, Ph.D.
New Jersey Conservation Foundation
John Dighton, Ph.D.
Director, Rutgers Pinelands Field Station
Michael Gallaway
Sierra Club
Janet Jackson-Gould
Nonprofit Consultant
Paul A. King
Chief Operating Officer, The Bannett Group, LTD
Don Kirchhoffer
Blanche Krubner
League of Women Voters
Loretta Pickus
Attorney, Senior Vice President General Counsel at Revel
Casino Hotel
Jessica Rittler Sanchez, Ph.D.
Water Resource Planner
Kevin Sparkman
Fusionspark Media
Barbara Trought
Angela Wenger
New Jersey Academy of Aquatic Sciences
Pinelands Preservation Alliance
Programs and Field Trips
August to October 2013
We temporarily replaced the
Pinelands Calendar of Events with
a listing of all PPA events and field
trips this summer.
Movie Under the Stars @ PPA
Pinelands Preservation Alliance
(PPA) is located at 17 Pemberton
Rd., Southampton NJ.
Enjoy a fun family night as we
show a film under the stars. We
will show the movie RENEWAL a feature-length documentary to
tell the stories of America's grassroots religious-environmental
movement. This movie captures
the efforts of men, women and
children who draw on their
Christian, Jewish, Buddhist and
Muslim traditions, to become better caretakers of the Earth. This is
a free program. Donations
are welcome.
Registration
required.
Pre-registration is required
for all programs. PPA members
get a 10% discount.
Visit www.pinelandsalliance.org
and click onExplorationandPPA
Programs for a complete listing of
PPA programs and trips.
To register contact Tom at
609-859-8860 x 14 or email
[email protected]
Red Trail Hike
Sat., Sept. 7, 10am
Insects, Fungi, Disturbance
and the Pine Barrens
Gentian
Thurs., Aug. 15, 7pm at PPA
Headquarters, Southampton
Ryan Rebozo, Ph.D. Candidate in
Biology, Drexel University will
present on his research. This
research aims to identify how
pollinators, mycorrhizal fungi,
and disturbance influence the sites
and plant community in which
Gentiana autumnalis is found.
Cost is $10/person.
Tour Warren Grove Air
National Guard Range
Sun., Aug. 18, 7pm – 9am
Warren Grove Air National Guard
Range is a 9,416-acre federal
facility in Burlington County.
9,000 acres at the Range remain in
their natural state. Dr. Walter
Bien, Director of the Office of
Pinelands Research at Drexel
University will lead us on a tour of
the Range. Visit the globally rare
dwarf pine plains, wetland
communities and learn about the
research, fire management and
reptile and amphibian surveys
happening here. Public access to
the Range is restricted – this is a
rare opportunity to explore an
amazing site!
Will require strenuous walking.
Cost is $15/person.
Carleton K. Montgomery
Executive Director, Pinelands Preservation Alliance
Fri., Aug. 23rd at PPAHeadquarters,
Southampton
The 6-mile Red Trail at the
Franklin Parker Preserve is
primarily a footpath through the
woods, but portions of it coincide
with dike and service roads, which
allows hikers to see the many and
diverse features of the Preserve. It
provides access to Cedar Swamps
and Hardwood Swamps, and
traverses Pitch Pine Lowlands and
Pine/Scrub Oak Forests. The pace
will be leisurely, with plenty of
stops along the way. Pack a lunch
and plenty of water. A joint
program between the Pinelands
Preservation Alliance and the NJ
Conservation Foundation. Cost is
$15/person.
Reptiles & Amphibians of the
Pines
Tues., Sept. 24, 7pm, at PPA
Headquarters, Southampton
Join Bob Ferguson, President of
the Northeast chapter of the
North American Field Herping
Association, for a presentation
about the reptiles and amphibians
(collectively known as herptiles)
of the Pine Barrens. Each herp
will be described, with special
attention paid to the more intriguing species. In addition to natural
history, the various herping techniques used to locate many of
these Pine Barrens denizens will
be revealed. Cost is $10/person.
Double Trouble Historic
District Walking Tour
Sat., Sept. 28th, 10am
The Double Trouble Historic
District at Double Trouble State
Park in Ocean County illustrates
two Pinelands industries: lumber-
ing and cranberry harvesting.
The village with the unique name
was first settled during the
Colonial era. As swamps were
cleared of the timber used for
cedar shingles, laths and ship
building, they were planted with
cranberry vines. Highlights of the
field trip include tours of the
restored sawmill and cranberry
sorting and packing house as static exhibits, and a visit to the cranberry bogs. There will be some
walking on sand roads. Andrew
Anderson, Historic Resource
Specialist for Double Trouble State
Park, will share stories of this village’s past while guiding the group
through the historic district. Cost
is $10/person.
Geology of the Pine Barrens
Thurs. Oct. 24, 7pm, at PPA
Headquarters, Southampton
Come learn about the geology of
the Pine Barrens and beyond. Join
geologist and PPA staff member,
Rich Bizub as he discusses approximately 150 million years of geologic history that shaped the area
as we know it today. Topics will
include the various geologic units,
fossils, marine life, sea level
changes, the Ice Age and glaciers.
Cost is $10/person.
9th Annual
Tour de Pines
Bicycle the length and breadth of
the Pinelands National Reserve
over 5 days!
The 2013 Tour de Pines will begin on
Wednesday, October 9th at PPA's
Bishop Farmstead in Southampton
Township and culminate at Batsto
Village on Sunday, October 13th.
Each day’s tour ranges from 40-55
miles per day, with average speeds of
11-13 mph.
The Tour de Pines is a voluntary, noncompetitive, unsupported ride.
Participants are required to provide
their own transportation, food and
lodging (recommendations will be
provided with cue sheets).
Participants may ride one, two or all
days of the Tour. $15 for PPA members
and $35 for non-members. For more
information or to register visit
www.pinelandsalliance.org click on
Exploration, Things to Do, Bicycling.
7
Pinelands Preservation Alliance
Address Service Requested
Nonprofit Organization
U.S. Postage
Bishop Farmstead
17 Pemberton Road
Southampton, NJ 08088
PAID
Permit #12
Vincentown, NJ 08088
Inside:
No Pipeline in the Pinelands p. 2
Gov. Christie Should Sign the Healthy Forests Act p. 3
Got Water? Thank the Pinelands & Highlands p. 4
Open Space Essential for Education p. 6
PPA Events in August to October p. 7
CL ICK: www.pinelandsalliance.org
CAL L : (609) 859-8860
FOL L OW : www.facebook.com/Pinelands
SCAN : Scan this code to get to PPA’s website
This code can be scanned and read by a
Smart Phone using a QR Code Reader app
available from iTunes or Android web stores
Name:
Address:
City:
County:
Phone (Day):
State:
Zip:
(Evening):
E-Mail:
Referred by:
Check enclosed payable to PPA
Mastercard
Visa
Discover
Card Number:
Exp. Date:
3 Digit Security Code:
Signature of Card Holder:
Membership Categories
$35
Basic
Family
Sponsor
Patron
$60
$100
$250
Benefactor
$500
Other
_____
Chairman’s Circle $1,000
ALL MEMBERS RECEIVE:
A PPA membership card
A year’s subscription to Inside the Pinelands
A PPA window sticker
Discounts on PPA merchandise and events
Follow Pinelands
Preservation Alliance on
Facebook:
www.facebook.com/Pinelands
Sponsors receive a copy of The Pine Barrens: Up Close & Natural DVD
Patrons receive John McPhee’s seminal book The Pine Barrens
Benefactors receive The Pine Barrens of New Jersey, a photographic history of this region
Chairman’s Circle members receive the book Seasons of the Pines and a personalized tour
of the Pinelands
Please Recycle this newsletter! When finished give it to a friend or
neighbor and encourage them to learn about PPA’s mission and programs.